Along with Peter Lasersohn,
I'm the co-founder and co-maintainer of the Semantics Archive:

Lambda tutorialIota and Jot: the simplest
non-trivial languages possible?How many
syllables in English?
It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most
intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.
--Charles Darwin
...and Dirac had a weird version of quantum theory in which every
state had probability either plus two or minus two. Probability, as
common sense defines it, is a number between zero and one expressing
our degree of confidence that an event will happen. Probability one
means that the event always happens; probability zero means that it
never happens. In Dirac's Alice-in-Wonderland world, every state
happens either more often than always or less often than never.
--Freeman Dyson, in the New York Review of
Books.

"In mathematics you don't understand things, you just get used to
them." --von Neumann [as reported by
G. Zukav, The Dancing Wu Li Masters]